REVIEW · UBUD
natural holy waterfalls healing tour.
Book on Viator →Operated by Tunik bali vacation · Bookable on Viator
One quiet ritual can reset your whole mood. This natural holy waterfalls healing tour centers on a Balinese purification practice locals call melukat, set around real temple water and peaceful waterfall grounds rather than a showy attraction. You also get a full Ubud day built around nature stops, with a planned break for traditional herbal tea and a proper lunch at one of Bali’s most famous rice terraces.
I especially like how the day mixes spirituality with actual scenery: Beji Griya Waterfall brings silence, rice field views, and a cooling cleansing moment, then the route continues through scenic countryside. One thing to keep in mind: this is a holy-water experience, so you’ll want to be ready for water, ceremony rules, and changing plans if weather turns rough.
In This Review
- Key Highlights You’ll Want to Know Before You Go
- A Melukat Cleansing Day, With Real Temple Water and Garden-Quiet Stops
- Beji Griya Waterfall: Where the Cleansing Happens Under Two Cascades
- Uma Pakel Agro Tourism: Herbal Tea, Jungle Views, and Optional Photo Fun
- Tegalalang Rice Terrace Lunch: Traditional Food With a Famous View
- What Makes This Tour Good Value at $35 (And What Might Not)
- Timing, Pickup, and How to Avoid a Wasted Morning
- What’s Included vs. What You’ll Pay Later
- Getting Ready for a Holy Water Day in Ubud
- Who This Tour Fits Best
- Should You Book This Natural Holy Water Healing Tour?
- FAQ
- What is the natural holy waterfalls healing tour in Ubud based on?
- How long is the tour?
- Is hotel pickup included?
- What does the tour include besides the healing ceremony?
- What are the main stops in the day?
- Is lunch included, and what kind of food is it?
- Are the jungle swing and bird nest included?
- What happens if the weather is bad?
- Can I cancel, and what is the cutoff time?
- Is this a private tour, and is it open to most travelers?
Key Highlights You’ll Want to Know Before You Go

- Melukat purification: a locally recognized cleansing with the goal of spiritual and emotional refresh.
- Beji Griya Waterfall setting: quiet temple grounds with rice fields, hidden canyons, and waterfall views.
- Balinese ceremony dress included: you’re not expected to bring the right outfit.
- Herbal tea break at Uma Pakel Agro Tourism: jungle views plus traditional tea, with extra photo stops available for pay.
- Tegalalang Rice Terrace lunch: a Balinese meal paired with big rice-terrace panoramas.
- Private group setup: only your group participates, with a guide and driver handling the day.
A Melukat Cleansing Day, With Real Temple Water and Garden-Quiet Stops

This tour is for you if you want a peaceful Ubud day that feels intentional. The core idea is spiritual purification using natural holy water at a temple site. In Bali, melukat is meant to help clear mental and emotional blockages, protect you from negative forces, and support what the practice calls aura healing. Whether you go for spiritual reasons, stress relief, or simply the calm of ceremonial space, the format is built to slow your day down.
The value is also very strong for what you get. At $35 for a 5 to 6 hour private car day, you’re not just buying entry to a single waterfall. You’re getting ceremony admission, guided transport, a ceremony dress, mineral water, herbal tea, and lunch at a set stop. That adds up fast in Ubud, where prices can jump when you piece together activities one by one.
One practical note I’d flag early: the tour requires good weather. If rain or poor conditions make the holy-water parts unsafe or uncomfortable, the operator offers a different date or a full refund. So if you’re planning this as your only flexible day, keep at least one backup option on your schedule.
You can also read our reviews of more tours and experiences in Ubud.
Beji Griya Waterfall: Where the Cleansing Happens Under Two Cascades
Your first big moment is at Beji Griya Waterfall, described as a place for extraordinary purification. The setting is the draw before anything formal happens: you’ll be surrounded by natural beauty, including rice fields, hidden canyon areas, and Balinese architectural details. The grounds are meant to feel quiet and inward, not crowded and loud.
In the ceremony experience, you’ll follow a cleansing flow tied to the holy water tradition. One detail that stands out from the experience descriptions is that the purification includes going through the water under two cascades. That matters because it turns the day from a “look at a waterfall” outing into something more physical and memorable. You’ll likely feel the temperature shift immediately, and it helps the ritual land in your body as much as your mind.
The best part of this stop is the balance: it’s scenic enough that the journey feels worthwhile, but it’s also a place where the focus stays on the cleansing. If you’re hoping for a calm reset day, this is the part that delivers it. You’re given time there (about two hours), which is enough to take it slow, find your comfort level, and enjoy the peaceful surroundings without rushing.
Possible consideration: you’ll want to be respectful about the ceremony space. This is a holy place, so expect rules around behavior, dress, and timing. Also, if you don’t enjoy water-based activities, this is not the tour to choose on a “dry and easy only” day.
Uma Pakel Agro Tourism: Herbal Tea, Jungle Views, and Optional Photo Fun

After the purification stop, the day gives you a softer landing at Uma Pakel Agro Tourism. This is your break from ceremony intensity. The included piece here is a traditional herbal tea with a jungle view, so you can cool down, rehydrate, and let your senses catch up.
You’ll also have time here for extra photo-style attractions. A giant swing and a bird nest photo spot are mentioned, but admission is not included, so you can decide on the spot whether it’s worth paying extra. If you love dramatic photos, this is your chance. If you’d rather keep the pace gentle, you can skip those and just enjoy the tea and scenery.
This stop lasts about one hour, and that’s a good length. Long enough to rest, short enough to keep you from feeling like you’re being shuffled from place to place. It also sets you up for lunch in the next stop without you feeling too full or too tired.
Tegalalang Rice Terrace Lunch: Traditional Food With a Famous View

Next up is Tegalalang Rice Terrace, one of Bali’s most photographed rice areas. Here, the tour shifts from water and ritual to a classic Ubud scene: the terraces, the panorama, and the sense of being surrounded by working farmland.
Lunch is included here, featuring Balinese traditional food. The meal timing (about one hour total at this stop) is practical because you’re not sitting for hours waiting around. You get a planned break, then you can enjoy the views without turning lunch into a stress point.
A small thing that makes this stop feel worth it: your previous stops build context. After you’ve had the sensory reset of holy water and the calm tea break, the rice terraces feel less like a check-the-box tourist moment and more like an extension of the day’s theme—natural rhythm and peaceful land.
What Makes This Tour Good Value at $35 (And What Might Not)

Let’s talk about the price in a way that helps you decide. $35 for a private car day with guide and driver, plus ceremony admission, ceremony dress, mineral water, herbal tea, and lunch is a strong deal for Ubud. You’re paying for more than a single attraction. You’re paying for a guided, structured flow that takes care of the logistics so you can focus on the experience.
Here’s where that value really shows:
- Ceremony admission and dress are included, so you’re not stuck figuring out what’s extra.
- Lunch is part of the package, which saves money and time.
- The day is paced around three stops, not a rushed drive-by list.
Where it might not fit:
- If you want a purely sightseeing day with lots of independent exploration, the structured nature may feel limiting.
- If you dislike ceremonies or water-based moments, the melukat focus may not match your style.
For the sweet spot: this is best if you want a calm, meaningful day that still includes real Ubud scenery.
Timing, Pickup, and How to Avoid a Wasted Morning

The tour starts at 10:00 am and pickup is offered. It’s a private tour, so your guide and driver plan the day around your group, and you don’t share the experience with unrelated people.
One detail worth taking seriously: in at least one account, a guest waited at reception for pickup and no one arrived on time. I can’t promise your pickup will be delayed, but this is a good reminder to confirm pickup details again the day before and be ready a little earlier than you think. In Ubud, traffic and timing can shift, and a gentle heads-up reduces stress.
Since the experience includes a specific ceremony schedule and a set time window for each stop, you’ll enjoy the day more if you treat it like a real appointment, not a flexible wander day.
What’s Included vs. What You’ll Pay Later

This tour keeps the core experience covered, which is what you want when you’re visiting a place for something as personal as purification.
Included:
- Healing ceremony admission
- Mineral water
- Balinese ceremony dress
- Lunch at the Tegalalang Rice Terrace stop
- Traditional herbal tea at Uma Pakel Agro Tourism
- Private car, guide, and driver
Not included:
- Personal shopping
- Jungle swing and bird nest admission (optional)
This setup helps you control costs. If you skip the paid photo attractions at Uma Pakel Agro Tourism, you can keep the day simple and predictable.
Getting Ready for a Holy Water Day in Ubud

Because this is melukat-style cleansing, your preparation is less about gear and more about comfort and respect.
I suggest you pack smart for wet moments:
- Bring or wear clothes you’re okay getting damp.
- Plan for quick cooling off after you pass under the cascades.
- Keep a simple attitude. The goal is calm, not spectacle.
Also, wear a respectful mindset. This kind of space runs on quiet. The more you act like you understand that, the easier it is for the day to feel peaceful instead of awkward.
Who This Tour Fits Best
This tour fits well if you:
- Want a serene, spiritual-feeling day without turning it into a multi-stop sprint.
- Like the idea of melukat cleansing and want it guided with ceremony admission included.
- Prefer private group time, with pickup and transport handled.
- Are also happy with classic Ubud scenery like Tegalalang Rice Terrace and jungle-view tea breaks.
If you’re on a tight schedule, check whether the 5 to 6 hour length works for you. If your day is packed with other active tours, this might feel slow in the best way or frustrating in the worst way.
Should You Book This Natural Holy Water Healing Tour?
I’d book it if your goal is a peaceful reset that mixes ceremony, waterfall nature, and a real lunch stop—without the hassle of arranging everything yourself. The biggest reason is the way the day is structured: it starts with the Beji Griya cleansing, then gives you space to rest and reflect, then lands on the rice terraces for a satisfying end.
I’d skip it if you want a purely casual sightseeing route with zero ceremony focus, or if water and temple rules make you uncomfortable. Also, if your trip is very weather-dependent and you can’t shift dates, keep in mind that poor weather can change plans.
If you’re flexible and you want something calm and meaningful in Ubud, this is one of the easier “yes” decisions around.
FAQ
What is the natural holy waterfalls healing tour in Ubud based on?
It’s based on melukat, a purification practice carried out with natural holy water to spiritually purify the mind and soul.
How long is the tour?
The tour runs about 5 to 6 hours.
Is hotel pickup included?
Yes, pickup is offered, and the tour includes a private car with a guide and driver.
What does the tour include besides the healing ceremony?
You also get mineral water, Balinese ceremony dress, traditional herbal tea, and lunch at the Tegalalang Rice Terrace stop.
What are the main stops in the day?
The day includes Beji Griya Waterfall, Uma Pakel Agro Tourism, and Tegalalang Rice Terrace.
Is lunch included, and what kind of food is it?
Yes. Lunch at Tegalalang Rice Terrace includes Balinese traditional food.
Are the jungle swing and bird nest included?
No. Admission to the jungle swing and bird nest is not included.
What happens if the weather is bad?
The tour requires good weather. If it’s canceled due to poor weather, you’ll be offered a different date or a full refund.
Can I cancel, and what is the cutoff time?
You can cancel for a full refund up to 24 hours before the experience’s start time.
Is this a private tour, and is it open to most travelers?
Yes, it’s private and only your group participates. Most travelers can participate, and service animals are allowed.
























